Showing posts with label Creating. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Creating. Show all posts

Saturday, February 26, 2022

A Cardigan for Baby Jack & A High School Education

 Last year I knitted my first-ever cardigan, a labor of love for my cousin's baby, who lives down the lane from us. I wished for tractor buttons, but all I could acquire at the time were cars.  It worked!

I'm not a great knitter, but this went alright.  I used the Verde Cardigan pattern, learned some new skills, and am very pleased with this project overall. It took a while (I sometimes knit in fits and starts), but was worth it both to create something small and warm and cute, and also to feel like I had Made a Cardigan.  Who knows what's next?  I could make a sock! Maybe even two socks!

{see how the pine is bleeding through the paint on my dresser? my dad painted this piece a million years ago. maybe I'll repaint it someday, but I sort of like the "character" these occasional spots provide!}



Actually, what's next is that I'm knitting a hat for my husband that I need to finish before spring comes. :)  Then I think I might move onto pink legwarmers for my Annie, who does many, many hours of ballet per week and would probably appreciate cozy legwarmers.  

We are finishing up one week at home and heading back to Charleston to be with my Dad tomorrow, for the next week.  I'm so thankful for the flexibility to do this! And I'm also thankful because prayers were answered.  He was so very sick in January, and has felt better and better--in spite of two rounds of chemo so far (3 days each).  Amazing.  Last week when we were there, he ate a big seafood meal one day, pizza the next, and Chinese food one night. I was floored, because when I'd last seen him, he was barely able to eat any solid foods at all, and was disgusted by the thought of food.  This alone has felt miraculous to me. 

In the midst of all of this, I'm trying to plan for Finn's schooling next year.  He toured a local private school--and it's not going to be an option.  So we've whittled it down to a local hybrid school (3 days at school, 2 at home) or just doing school-at-home with more online content, because he enjoys formal classes so much.  I'm hoping we can land the plane on this decision within the next few weeks.  Class registrations happen in March, so we have to get it all sorted out now!  One thing is for sure, though: he'll be taking French 3 for college credit next year.  The boy loves French! He'll probably also continue with Spanish 3, but it's a lot of work to learn two languages, and it takes time away from other subjects that he's also wanting to learn (like science!).  So we'll see.  I sometimes wish Finn were the type of child who liked only a couple subjects and didn't like several, so that we could easily narrow down his studies and focus.  But he likes everything.  He's reading a math book for fun in his spare time, studies languages voraciously, is itching to do more science, could talk about politics all day long....frankly, the only thing he doesn't truly consume with gusto is literature, but he does enjoy novels when he reads them--it's just that he's too busy learning about everything else under the sun. How does one homeschool a child like this? I'm at a loss most of the time.  I have to remember that my public school education isn't the gold standard (I barely recall much of what I did in high school, and frankly, much of it felt like time-wasting and game-playing just to achieve a grade).  Deep breath! We can do this!

As for Annie, she's basically spending most of 5th grade doing ballet, working through her math book, or reading enormous quantities of books.  She reads for hours a day, and since she's spending so much time reading (history, science, and loads of literature), I do very little hands-on homeschooling with her.  I think reading is the best education. :) 

February is almost over!  Spring is on the way. I'm so thankful for this, and for my Dad's continued improvement.  Praise be to God for His mercies and graces.  Amen!

Monday, May 1, 2017

Finn Does Beethoven

Today is Kitchen Day, which typically means I scrub the kitchen, but today I roasted a turkey, baked gingerbread, and went through the freezer.  One of my goals for May is to bake and cook my way through my freezers, to make way for the summer bounty. Whew.

Accompanying my cleaning today was this wonderful music: Finn played the old piano (rich sound, ivory keys) downstairs.  He took the main theme of "Ode to Joy" from Beethoven's Ninth Symphony and improvised and riffed off of it, going high treble for some parts, low bass for others.  He played with the dynamics, occasionally used the damper, and added extra notes.  Sometimes the song would built to a crescendo with extra little bass notes thrown into the mix; other times he played way high and slowed down before adding the theme into the bass notes.  


It was heartbreakingly beautiful, once I realized what was happening.  Finally I had to just stop everything and sit down and listen.  I didn't understand how he kept bringing it back to the same theme so effortlessly, but he did.  


Truly, truly: goosebumps.  And I love that he loves this music. 

Do you bow down before Him, you millions?
Do you sense your Creator, o world?
Seek Him above the canopy of stars!
He must dwell beyond the stars. 

Saturday, April 1, 2017

A Haiku A Day

Today National Poetry Month began and yesterday morning I was reflecting on "NaPoWriMo" (National Poetry Writing Month, where the goal is to write a poem a a day for the entire month). I've never been able to achieve such heights because that level of output overwhelms me. 

*But!!* yesterday as I drank coffee and looked out at the foggy fields I realized what I can do is write a haiku each day. Not because writing haiku is easier (it's not!), but it's shorter, and I can just jot the poem's bits and pieces down on the daily to-do list that sits on my kitchen counter.  I can ponder it throughout the day while I'm doing all my routine cooking and cleaning and sewing and such, and by bedtime I can have 17 syllables, and it doesn't feel like I've had to sit down and write something. 

I had a head start yesterday: 10 syllables before breakfast, and it wasn't even April yet! As of tonight, I've got two sweet little haiku. 


Many thanks to the fog for its inspiration. 

Friday, March 24, 2017

Finn's Latest

Just in time for a burst of spring, Finn finished his wintry painting and brought it home yesterday.

My favorite part is the falling snow...an effect achieved by flicking paint with a toothbrush, apparently. 


I'm going to enjoy looking at this when the heat of summer swelters us!

Thursday, April 21, 2016

Ocellated Turkey Portrait

The ocellated turkey lives in the Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico.  

Finn painted one for his grandfather, an avid turkey hunter who has completed the "World Slam" of turkey hunting--including acquisition of an elusive ocellated turkey.  Finn decided to paint the ocellated for his grandfather because, let's face it, this is one gorgeous bird. 


Well done, Finn!!